A wool merchant from a prominent Lynn family, Richard was possibly the son of Thomas Waterden, a leading participant in the political struggles which afflicted the town in the early fifteenth century. Whatever the exact relationship between the two men, it is likely that Richard was an elder son: there is no record of his admission to the franchise, indicating that he became a freeman of the borough by reason of his birth, a privilege reserved for the first-born sons of burgesses.
Richard began his career as an office-holder upon joining the common council or 27. He was subsequently promoted to the 24, the upper council which dominated borough affairs, and he was elected mayor shortly before his death. Like other members of the 24 he had dealings with Lynn’s feudal lord, the bishop of Norwich, and in 1424 he participated in important discussions with Bishop Wakering about securing an adequate supply of fresh water for the borough. Later in the same decade he was one of the burgesses who rode to Norwich to attend the installation of Wakering’s successor, Bishop Alnwick.
In both his Parliaments Waterden’s fellow MP was Bartholomew Petipas*, Thomas Waterden’s principal opponent a few years earlier, but the fact that the two men were elected to consecutive assemblies suggests that they were able to work together. Before they set out for the Parliament of 1423 the corporation issued them with a copy of a charter to show the bishop of Norwich, who was attending the assembly as a member of the Lords. The document in question was undoubtedly Henry V’s confirmation of Lynn’s charter of 1410, since this confirmation was itself renewed a few months after Parliament was dissolved.
During the same Parliament, Richard and several other merchants from Lynn were involved in a dispute with John Smyth, a mariner from Danzig. Some time earlier, they had won a suit against Smyth in the English admiralty court, but he had successfully appealed against the verdict in the summer of 1422. They responded by petitioning the Crown, which in December 1423 appointed John, bishop of London, along with the keeper of the privy seal and future bishop of Norwich, William Alnwick, and others to investigate the matter, but with what result is not known.
Waterden ended his career as mayor of Lynn, dying in office in February 1430, having served less than half his term. There is no evidence that he had any children, although it is possible that William Waterden, who had become a member of the 24 by the early 1430s, was his son.
